Brooklyn | 7101 Shore Road, No. 2B

A one-bedroom, one-bath, 800-square-foot prewar apartment with a combined living and dining room that has a nonworking fireplace, a windowed galley kitchen with white appliances, a windowed bathroom, and parquet floors, on the second floor of a six-story nondoorman, Tudor-style elevator building that’s part of a two-building complex with laundry rooms and a gym. Dianne Henning, Corcoran Group, 917-974-0005; corcoran.com

Maintenance

$803 a month

Pros

Although the kitchen is not currently configured with a table and chairs, it does have enough space to be “eat-in.” The 72nd Street bus stop, offering express buses to Manhattan, is steps away.

Cons

The two windows in the living room face a courtyard, leaving the space feeling dim.


MANHATTAN | 60 Sutton Place South, No. 5HS

A one-bedroom, one-bath, 800-square-foot postwar apartment with a combined living and dining room that has a door to a covered balcony, a galley kitchen with stainless steel appliances, and a bathroom with a stall shower and subway-tile walls, on the fifth floor of a doorman elevator building at East 53rd Street that’s part of a two-tower complex with a garden, gym, heated driveway and garage. Eileen Angelo, Sotheby’s International Realty, 415-568-8010; sothebysrealty.com

Maintenance

$1,811 a month

Pros

The balcony offers partial East River views. The home office is a desk in a bumped-out section of the bedroom lined with windows and above the garden.

Cons

The kitchen is tight, and its back wall is taken up by a service door, making it off-limits for storage or shelving.


Manhattan | 125 East 74th Street, No. 2D

A two-bedroom, two-bath, 1,200-square-foot prewar apartment with a combined living and dining room that has a fireplace, beamed ceilings, archways and a window seat; a windowed kitchen with cabinet-faced appliances; a primary suite; and a secondary suite currently functioning as a TV room, on the second floor of an eight-story doorman elevator building with a laundry room and gym. Francine Crocker, Corcoran Group, 917-545-7208; corcoran.com

Maintenance

$3,448 a month

Pros

Six closets and an efficiently designed kitchen provide ample storage. There’s a smooth flow from room to room. A basement storage unit is included.

Cons

One of the two doors in the TV room opens into the kitchen, though it could be closed off if that space were converted into the second bedroom. The co-op allows mortgages to cover only 50 percent of the purchase price.

Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.

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Source: | This article originally belongs to Nytimes.com

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